While there were some notable exceptions, the first 40 years of Hollywood movies about organized crime rarely strayed from the blueprint established by Warner Bros. studios beginning in the 1930s with the classics “Little Caesar” and “The Public Enemy.” This all changed with the arrival of “The Godfather” (1972) and its first sequel (1974). Violence was still a key component, but it took a second seat to nuance, and the dramatic aspects became heightened to almost operatic levels. Both films won numerous industry awards including two Oscars for Best Picture. “The Godfather, Part II” is the only sequel to win that particular award (“Lord of the Rings: Return of the King” was part of a planned trilogy and is not considered a sequel). Not a Wasted Frame To Be Found Certainly smaller in scale, first time director Graham Moore’s chamber piece “The Outfit” owes a great deal to “The Godfather” …